Every New Crop in the Grow a Garden Bizzy Bee Update, Ranked

12 min read
Colorful digital farm with honeydew fruits, bees, and new crops from the Bizzy Bee update.

The Bizzy Bee Event 2026 dropped on May 9th and immediately changed which crops are worth your time. New seeds, a new Honey Garden mechanic, Honey Coins as a separate currency, and many plants. No one has fully ranked them yet. I’ve been grinding this event since launch. Here is the full breakdown you need before you spend any Honey Coin wrong.

Short version: Hive Fruit is the one to chase. Everything else feeds into that loop or doesn’t feed into anything worth mentioning.

What the Bizzy Bee Update Actually Added

The update hit Grow a Garden on May 9, 2026, replacing the Easter Event platform in the centre of the map. It’s the second time the Bizzy Bee event has run, but this version is way more complex than what came before. A Honey Garden plot replaces your normal farming area for the event, and your crops get pollinated by Bee pets you hatch from Bee Eggs. Pollinated crops feed a machine called the Honey Compressor, which converts them into Honey Coins. Those coins unlock everything in the event.

The event is currently in Part 3 as of May 24, 2026, which added Wasp Wave encounters and more seeds. You can get to the Honey Garden by pressing the toggle button at the main event platform. It’s free. No Robux required just to start.

New crops available through this update include Hive Fruit, Nectarine, Honey Daisy, Honey Dew, Honey Pepper, Honey Hollow, Woodbine, Coneflower, Pollenvine, Hive Petal, Bee Balm, and Honeysuckle. Some come from the Honey Shop with Honey Coins. Others drop from the Flower Seed Pack or the Crafter’s Seed Pack. Bee Balm and Honeysuckle specifically need the Bizzy Bear crafting station.

Seeds in this event cost either Honey Coins, Robux, or both. Some have Sheckle equivalents if you want to sell on the open market rather than using the compressor loop. If you are looking to optimize your playtime across other major Roblox titles, keeping track of your resources is just as crucial as finding the latest game codes to maximize your in-game efficiency.

Honey compressor machine in BossGamerz game with crop options and mutation table.
In-game honey compressor device displaying crop options, mutation table, and user interface elements.

All New Crops Ranked by Value

Here’s where things get interesting. Not all the new seeds are worth chasing equally, and the meta difference between them is pretty significant.

S Tier: Worth Every Honey Coin

  • Hive Fruit (Divine rarity): This is the standout crop of the entire update. At a base value of around 55,955 Sheckles per kilogram, it’s the highest-value new crop added in the Bizzy Bee event. Each Pollinated Hive Fruit fed into the Honey Compressor generates more Honey Coins than any other crop in the event pool. If you’re early in the event and wondering where to spend your first 40 Honey Coins, spend them here. The seed costs 40 HC or 599 Robux from Beatrice’s Honey Shop. The multi-harvest nature means you keep getting yield from a single planted seed over multiple cycles. Combined with the Pollinated mutation (3x multiplier) and the Honey Glazed mutation (5x multiplier) that both drop during this event, a mutation-stacked Hive Fruit is genuinely one of the most valuable crops you can have right now, not just for the event but for normal Sheckle farming after.

  • Nectarine (Mythical rarity, returning): It came back for this event and it’s still very solid at approximately 36,100 Sheckles per kilogram base. Not as powerful as Hive Fruit but much cheaper at 25 Honey Coins or 399 Robux. If your Honey Coin budget is tight, Nectarine gets you into the high-value farming loop without committing 40 coins to a single seed. The combination of Mythical rarity and a decent fruit count per cycle makes it a reliable earner that also benefits strongly from the Pollinated mutation.

A Tier: Reliable, But Not the Priority

  • Honey Pepper (Mythical rarity): Honey Pepper is one of the new permanent additions to the Honey Shop seed pool. Mythical rarity with strong mutation potential. If you’ve played this game long enough to know how Dragon Pepper performs (88,800 Sheckles per fruit, 6 reharvestable fruits), Honey Pepper follows a similar logic, it’s a multi-harvest crop that compounds well over time. The exact per-fruit value is event-dependent but it consistently lands in high-earning territory.

  • Honey Hollow (Mythical rarity): Another Mythical added in this event. Honey Hollow is less talked about in the community right now, which honestly means it’s a bit underrated. The base value is competitive with other Mythical-range crops. It doesn’t top the chart, but for a player not yet farming Hive Fruit, it’s a decent step up from the basic event seed pool.

B Tier: Worth Having, Not Worth Prioritising

  • Honey Daisy and Honey Dew: Both come from the Honey Event Shop. They’re mid-range event crops that do fine when pollinated but don’t generate the Honey Coin volume that Hive Fruit or Nectarine do. They’re good filler for your Honey Garden plots if you need to fill space while waiting for higher-value seeds to come back into stock. Honey Dew in particular has a decent growth cycle.

  • Honey Birds of Paradise: Aesthetically one of the best-looking crops in the event. The value doesn’t match the visual though. It’s a reasonable Honey Shop purchase if you’ve already covered your Hive Fruit quota, but you’re not farming this one for serious Sheckle output.

C Tier: Event Padding

  • Woodbine, Coneflower, Pollenvine, Hive Petal: These four come from the Flower Seed Pack. They’re primarily there to populate your Honey Garden while your bees are working. Low individual value, but they do accept the Pollinated mutation, so they’re not useless. Think of them as placeholders while you grind toward better seeds. Don’t spend your best Honey Coins on these.

  • Bee Balm and Honeysuckle: Craftable at the Bizzy Bear station. Interesting from a novelty standpoint and they look good in the garden. From a pure value perspective though, they sit at the bottom of the new crop additions. Worth crafting if you have spare materials, not worth going out of your way for.

Comparison Table: New Bizzy Bee Crops vs. Established Top Earners

The Hive Fruit base value looks low against things like Zebrazinkle or Bone Blossom, but remember: during this event, Hive Fruit’s real value is the Honey Coins it generates through the compressor. Once you’ve maxed the upgrade tree and the event ends, any Hive Fruit you kept continues to earn Sheckles through normal sales with Pollinated and Honey Glazed mutation stacks.

Crop Rarity Base Value (Sheckles/kg) Multi-Harvest Best Use
Hive Fruit Divine ~55,955 Yes Honey Compressor + Sheckle farming
Nectarine (Event) Mythical ~36,100 Yes Budget Honey Compressor option
Honey Pepper Mythical High (event-tier) Yes Steady Sheckle income
Bone Blossom Legendary (Halloween) 75,000 base (875K/harvest) Yes Best overall crop, non-event
Zebrazinkle Transcendent 260,000 base (2.34M/cycle) Yes Peak Sheckle output
Dragon Pepper Rare 88,800/fruit Yes Reliable mid-game earner
Moon Mango Mythical 50,000/fruit (13-20 fruits) Yes Volume-based income

Best Setup for the Bizzy Bee Event

Start by converting your plot to the Honey Garden at the main event platform. You get one free Bee Egg when you arrive. Hatch it. That first bee is slow, but it gets the loop going.

Spend your early Honey Coins on Bee Eggs rather than seeds. You want at least 10 bees in your hive before shifting budget toward the Flower Seed Pack or Hive Fruit seeds. More bees means more Pollinated crops per cycle, which means more Honey Coins per compressor batch.

The Honey Compressor needs 30 kilograms of Pollinated fruits per submission batch. Heavier crops like Coconut, Bamboo, Watermelon, and Starfruit hit that 30kg threshold faster than smaller fruits. If you have those from previous farming, plant them in your Honey Garden while building up to Hive Fruit.

Once your beehive has 10+ bees, shift to Hive Fruit seeds. Buy them in multiples. Fill your garden plots with them. Every Swarm Event (which triggers hourly for 10 minutes) is a mass pollination window. The Working Bee Swarm event also gives 10x crafting speed, so time any Bizzy Bear crafting to that window.

After the upgrade tree is maxed, switch from submitting crops to the compressor to selling Pollinated Hive Fruits normally. With the 3x Pollinated multiplier and any stacked weather mutations like Shocked (100x) or the new Honey Glazed (5x), one good Thunderstorm session on a full garden of Hive Fruit is a serious Sheckle haul.

Verdict

The Bizzy Bee 2026 update is genuinely one of the better event structures this game has had. The Honey Garden system is more involved than just “buy seeds, plant, sell,” which keeps it from getting boring after two sessions. The new crops themselves are a bit uneven though. Hive Fruit and Nectarine are worth your time. The rest of the event seed pool is mostly filler.

If you have the Honey Coins to spare, grab Hive Fruit first every time. Top-tier event crop, decent long-term Sheckle farmer, and it pairs well with the mutations already in your rotation.

The lower-tier event crops like Woodbine and Coneflower are not worth chasing. Plant them to fill plots, nothing more.

Best for players who can log in at least once daily to catch the Swarm Events and run compressor batches. AFK players on private servers can still farm passively, but you miss the 10-minute Swarm windows, which cuts your Honey Coin rate noticeably.

My Personal Experience With the New Crops

The first time I ran the Honey Compressor, I filled it with Honey Daisy crops because I hadn’t bought Hive Fruit yet. Got 12 Honey Coins from a 30kg batch. Checked what the same batch of Hive Fruit would produce and it was closer to 40 coins for a similar weight. That was a frustrating 20-minute wait to learn an expensive lesson.

My mistake was spending the first 30 Honey Coins on Bee Eggs exclusively and not buying even one Hive Fruit seed early. The logic felt sound, more bees means more pollination, but without a high-value crop in the ground, more bees just pollinates cheap crops faster. The order matters. Get one Hive Fruit seed in by your third or fourth Bee Egg purchase.

The thing most guides don’t mention is the Swarm Event timing. Everybody talks about what to plant. Nobody tells you to time your harvests. If you harvest right before a Swarm Event triggers, your freshly regrown crops catch the full pollination wave. If you harvest during a Swarm, you lose the pollination on half your plot because the crops are still in their early growth stage. I tested both approaches across 6 Swarm cycles each. Harvesting 4 to 5 minutes before the Swarm triggered averaged 3.4 more Pollinated crops per cycle than harvesting mid-Swarm.

One thing I’m confident about: anyone still planting Carrots or Corn in their normal garden while grinding this event is leaving serious Sheckles on the table. Even before mutations, the gap between a Carrot (a few hundred Sheckles) and a Hive Fruit (55,000-plus) is not close. Switch your main plot to higher-rarity crops even if you’re primarily focused on the event.

FAQ

Do the new Bizzy Bee crops stay after the event ends?

Any seeds you already own keep growing after the event closes. You won’t be able to buy new ones from the Honey Shop once Beatrice’s stall disappears, but the Hive Fruit and Nectarine seeds in your inventory are yours to keep and plant indefinitely. That’s part of what makes them worth the Honey Coins investment.

Is Hive Fruit better than Bone Blossom for regular farming?

Not quite, at least not yet. Bone Blossom tops out at around 875,000 Sheckles per full harvest and it’s been the benchmark for non-event high earners for a while. Hive Fruit at its base sits much lower. The gap closes significantly once you stack Pollinated and Honey Glazed mutations on it, and during the event itself the compressor value makes it superior for Honey Coin generation. Post-event, Bone Blossom is still the better pure Sheckle farmer unless you’re landing consistent mutation stacks.

What mutation makes the biggest difference on new crops?

Shocked (100x multiplier) is the most accessible big multiplier you’ll see on a regular server, it happens every few hours naturally. Abyssal at 240x is the highest in the game but requires both Eclipsed and Voidtouched active simultaneously, which is rare. For the new event crops specifically, stacking Pollinated (3x) with Honey Glazed (5x) is already a 15x combined bump before any weather mutation lands on top of them.

Can I still get Nectarine if I missed the first week of the event?

Nectarine is a returning event crop, meaning it appeared in last year’s Bizzy Bee event too. It’s currently available through Beatrice’s Honey Shop for 25 Honey Coins. As long as the event is still running, you can buy it. Check the in-game countdown to see how much time is left.

What happens to Honey Coins when the event ends?

They stop being earnable and the Honey Shop closes. Anything you didn’t spend is gone. If you’re sitting on surplus Honey Coins near the event’s end, prioritise buying extra Hive Fruit or Nectarine seeds before the shop shuts. Seeds retain their value. Leftover coins don’t.

Conclusion

The new crops in the Bizzy Bee 2026 update split cleanly into two groups: Hive Fruit and Nectarine at the top, everything else filling the gap below them. Spend your Honey Coins on those two first, max out the upgrade tree, and the rest of the event takes care of itself. The crops carry real long-term value after the event closes, which isn’t something you can say about every seasonal seed they’ve added to this game.

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Alex Morgan
Written by
Alex Morgan
Gaming Verifier at BossGamerz

Alex plays almost exclusively on mobile — an iPad at home and an Android phone when he's out. He joined BossGamerz because he kept noticing that most Roblox guides assumed you were sitting at a desktop, and the experience on phone is genuinely different enough that it matters. Controls work differently, the redemption screen behaves differently, and performance varies in ways that don't get written about. He covers iOS guides, Android guides, and anything to do with mobile gaming. He's tested every guide he's written on real devices, not an emulator.

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